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DISCUSSION QUESTIONS Hang the Moon |
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1. There are two very different
epigraphs that open the book: one from Queen Elizabeth I and another
from Rex Walls, the author’s father. Discuss how these quotes set up
your reading experience and how they relate to the overall story.
2. Upon Sallie’s return to the Big
House, the Duke makes it her job to “bring out the Kincaid” in her
stepbrother Eddie (page 44). What does it mean to be a Kincaid? Besides
the Duke and Sallie, are there any characters that also display classic
“Kincaid” traits?
3. Consider the Duke’s
phrase “I’ll treat you fair, but I won’t treat you special” (page 74).
What do you think of this principle? How does it show up throughout the
story? Are there any moments that contradict this idea?
4. As Sallie grows up,
there are several times she can be seen emulating her father. For
example, she parrots the way he says “Steady” when trying to teach Eddie
to drive the Defiance Coaster. What lessons does Sallie take away from
her father? At what point does she come into her own and deviate from
his education?
5. Eddie is as much his mother’s son
as Sallie is her father’s daughter. He is withdrawn, intelligent and
soft-tempered. What does this contrast between siblings reveal about the
family? What does it reveal about Sallie?
6. The idea of family is hugely
important in HANG THE MOON. How do family bonds influence the events of
the novel? Is blood thicker than water, so to speak? What relationships
stood out to you the most?
7. Marriage is a major theme
throughout the novel, and a big question for Sallie, who is “not sure
[she’ll] ever want to get married” (page 34). How is marriage
represented in HANG THE MOON? How does marriage differ between the time
period in the book and now?
8. Sallie has two love
interests: Tom Dunbar, her childhood friend, and Lieutenant Douglas
Rawley. How does each man influence her actions? Before the end of the
novel, were you rooting for one or the other of these very different
men?
9. For much of the book, Aunt Faye
seems like a pitiable and weak-hearted character in need of defense.
However, we learn more as the story goes on. How does your view of Aunt
Faye transform over the course of the novel?
10. Many of the characters in HANG
THE MOON could be described as morally gray. How would you arrange the
characters on a moral spectrum from good to bad? Does anyone fall more
clearly on one side or the other for you?
11. Abraham Crockett is a man with as
much charisma and pride as Duke Kincaid himself, though he does not have
the same wealth and power. What does his narrative add to the overall
story? What would we lose from the reading experience if Abraham were
absent?
12. Sallie cares a great deal about
heirlooms. She keeps her mother’s moonstone necklace, she secures Jane’s
sterling silver hairbrush so that Eddie can have “something of his
mama’s” (page 53), and she acknowledges how much the Kincaid jewels
might mean to Mattie. Why do you think Sallie places so much importance
on these items?
13. Overcoming long-held
grudges and breaking generational curses are key to the plot of HANG THE
MOON. For example, the feud between the Bonds and Kincaids can be traced
back to a land dispute between the families’ grandfathers. In the face
of these conflicts, what does Sallie do that helps her succeed where
others have failed?
14. Though Sallie is used to
being the biggest fish her side of the pond, Georgette Rheims’ wealth
blows her out of the water. Georgette dredges up insecurities Sallie
never knew she had and shares some harsh truths. Imagine how differently
things may have turned out had Georgette never contacted Sallie. Do you
think her husband’s assessment of her motivations is accurate? Or is
there more to the story?
15. Think about all the women in the
story --- Sallie, Aunt Faye, Jane, Kat, Mattie, Gloria, Georgette and
others --- and think about how they either buck or conform to
traditional gender roles. How have these women’s lives been shaped by
their own choices versus the desires of the men around them?
16. At the end of the novel, Sallie has
a flashback to a memory of her mother that had been long forgotten, and
she wonders if it is truly a memory or just wishful thinking. What do
you think? Does it change the conclusions Sallie draws from her
experiences one way or the other? |
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